The Visitor: Or, Monthly InstructorReligious Tract Society., 1842 - Christianity |
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Page 5
... nature does nothing per saltum ; in other words , that the Almighty has been pleased to show his power in the establishment of a plan of creation , founded upon an increase in the gradual developement of organization . Thus , as we ...
... nature does nothing per saltum ; in other words , that the Almighty has been pleased to show his power in the establishment of a plan of creation , founded upon an increase in the gradual developement of organization . Thus , as we ...
Page 8
... nature gradually dies . Thus , although our continent has in no part the luxuriant fertility of tropi- cal regions , yet it has nowhere a climate that consumes the entire labour of the in- habitants in procuring the means of sub ...
... nature gradually dies . Thus , although our continent has in no part the luxuriant fertility of tropi- cal regions , yet it has nowhere a climate that consumes the entire labour of the in- habitants in procuring the means of sub ...
Page 9
... nature never par- takes of the uniformity which so long repressed the spirit of the nations that inhabited the forests and plains of the north . In all these countries there is a constant alternation of moderately elevated mountains ...
... nature never par- takes of the uniformity which so long repressed the spirit of the nations that inhabited the forests and plains of the north . In all these countries there is a constant alternation of moderately elevated mountains ...
Page 14
... nature and meaning the one portrayed in our picture . Whether Cain brought a sheaf , garnished with flowers and clusters of ripe fruit , or whether he ground and kneaded the corn into cakes , or prepared it in some way , so as to render ...
... nature and meaning the one portrayed in our picture . Whether Cain brought a sheaf , garnished with flowers and clusters of ripe fruit , or whether he ground and kneaded the corn into cakes , or prepared it in some way , so as to render ...
Page 33
... nature , and whose benevolent disposition would lead her to seek her pleasure in visiting and benefiting the poor , who are so much more accessible in the country than in London . There , too , she had the enjoy- ment of a garden , in ...
... nature , and whose benevolent disposition would lead her to seek her pleasure in visiting and benefiting the poor , who are so much more accessible in the country than in London . There , too , she had the enjoy- ment of a garden , in ...
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animal appear attention aunt Priscilla beauty blessed bower bird bricks Bryozoa caboceer called catkins character Christ Christian church colour crusaders Cyprus death delight Divine Divine grace duty earth Egypt England eternal evil faith father favour fear feel feet fifth crusade flowers Flustra friends gaze give glory gospel grace ground habits hand hath heart heaven holy honour Jack Sheppard James Jerusalem Jesus Jurston kind king labour lady land leaves living look Lord ment mind nature ness never observed ornaments Palestine Papists parliament passed person pilot fish pleasure polypes poor present prince proceedings Ptolemy racter religion remark Saladin Saracens Saviour scene Scripture seen servant soul species spirit Stonehenge stones Syria temper thee things thou thought thousand tion tree truth unto willow word young zoophytes